Not exact matches
On the other, it's a for - the - cheap - seats would - be-blockbuster with CGI swarms
of the undead, and a
plane crash sequence that features the three stupidest things we've seen in a
movie in at least a year.
Recounting the extraordinary life story
of Louis Zamperini (played by Jack O'Connell, «Starred Up»)-- who ran for America in the 1936 Olympics, survived a
plane crash during World War II, stayed afloat for 75 days on a life raft before forced internment in a series
of Japanese POW camps — Jolie and company seem to be digging into the Spielberg playbook: The
movie offers up sun - dappled nostalgia for Depression - era Southern California, harrowing wartime sequences, and even a shark attack, but it serves them all up with maximum efficiency.
The film opens on the island
of Themyscira, a paradise island created by the god Zeus and hidden from the real world by a protective shield, and the film stays there for a while as we follow Diana from curious little girl to fully trained warrior princess but once Steve Trevor's fighter
plane crashes there and Diana realises there is a war being fought in world she does not know
of that is not too far away then we swiftly get brought into London in 1918 and this shift from fantasy into a «real world» scenario gives the film a greater sense
of depth, and when combined with characters that you actually care about then Wonder Woman is head and shoulders above all
of the other DCEU
movies on the strength
of that alone.
It's the sort
of movie where the heroes trade quips as they're exchanging machine - gun fire or their
plane is about to
crash.
In the case
of Donnie Darko, any
movie that used a
plane crash as a major catalyst for its plot and which was released just a month after the 9/11 attacks had about as much
of a chance
of success as I would if I tried to get a gig writing a Star Wars
movie.
The
movie contains frequent depictions
of deaths from drowning and disease, extensive property destruction, explosions,
crashing vehicles,
planes falling from the sky, along with countless corpses.
Interesting
movie, great pacing and feeling
of dread that just happens to contain THE MOST TERRIFYING
PLANE CRASH EVER FILMED!!!! God god that scared the crap out
of me.
Love blossoms in the wake
of a
plane crash in this fun romantic disaster
movie with Idris Elba and Kate Winslet.
The classic Abrahams / Zucker spoof
of 1970s disaster and airplane
crash movies has the all the crew and passengers fall ill, leaving a former war pilot who's now terrified
of flying the only one who can land the
plane safely.
In the
movie's opening bit, he manages to render two new state -
of - the - art fighter
planes totally worthless and
crash his own
plane besides.
This was in large part due to the advertisements — which featured a
crashing plane — for the
movie being pulled in the aftermath
of 9/11.
For a
movie revolving around two
plane crash survivors traipsing through snow covered mountains in order to survive, probably not a good idea to take the cliché
of «falling off a cliff» so gosh darn literal where it came to the story's more supercilious narrative constructs.
He found a bunch
of chopped - up reel markers and B -
movie outtakes and edited them together into the matter of A Movie — plane and car crashes, a Teddy Roosevelt speech, Indian uprisings, war deaths, elephant hunts, shivering natives, and a scuba dive into ancient ruins, all scored to Respighi's triumphant Pines of
movie outtakes and edited them together into the matter
of A
Movie — plane and car crashes, a Teddy Roosevelt speech, Indian uprisings, war deaths, elephant hunts, shivering natives, and a scuba dive into ancient ruins, all scored to Respighi's triumphant Pines of
Movie —
plane and car
crashes, a Teddy Roosevelt speech, Indian uprisings, war deaths, elephant hunts, shivering natives, and a scuba dive into ancient ruins, all scored to Respighi's triumphant Pines
of Rome.